New claimants facing 'bedroom tax'

Shadow work and pensions secretary Liam Byrne said the PM need to get a grip on the scheme dubbed the 'bedroom tax'

Some pensioners with spare rooms will be hit by reductions in housing benefit under what critics dub the Government's "bedroom tax", the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) has confirmed.

Existing claimants in homes where someone of working age also lives have been spared the welfare cut, but new claimants under the Universal Credit scheme will face deductions.

Shadow work and pensions secretary Liam Byrne told the Sunday People, which uncovered the different status of new claimants, that the Prime Minister needed to "get a grip".

"Ministers promised to protect pensioners from the bedroom tax, but thousands are set to lose out.

"David Cameron had better get a grip fast, before this scheme descends into total chaos."

A DWP spokesman said: "We want to reassure pensioners claiming housing benefit that they will not be affected by this policy now, or when Universal Credit begins, even if one partner is below pension age."

He confirmed however that this would not apply to new claimants after that time.

A poll for the newspaper found that voters believed - by a majority of 46% to 35% - that the principle of the change was "only fair" at a time of economic austerity.

But clear overall majorities said that its implementation should be delayed for a rethink on how to implement it (52%), that it should only apply if people refused smaller homes (60) and that it should not apply at all to Army families with children away on active service (77%).

ComRes interviewed 2,002 British adults online from on February 13-14 2013.